In a recent piece, I had highlighted how Morgan Stanley believes that the “exceptional” demand for memory chips will normalize, and consequently Nvidia (NVDA) will be the one to come out on the winning side because of this. Yet, even in a so-called normalized situation, the demand for memory chips will continue to grow. Agreed, the pace of growth may go through its own motions, subject to market cycles, but memory remains a crucial and undeniable component of the wider AI picture, keeping demand intact.
Financial services major BNP Paribas thinks the same as well. In a recent note to clients, the broker said, “Our analysis of CQ1 contract prices of 50+ [dynamic random access memory] SKUs and 75+ NAND SKUs leads us to estimate overall [dynamic random access memory average selling prices] can advance 90% Q/Q in CQ1, followed by a 6% Q/Q increase in CQ2 as increasing AI server demand is driving a wider supply-demand imbalance that’s exerting upward pricing pressure. For NAND, we estimate CQ1 prices could increase 55% Q/Q, followed by 5% Q/Q increase in CQ2 predominantly driven by supply-side dynamics as NAND suppliers continue to shift capacity to enterprise storage products while remaining prudent on capacity additions.”
Based on this analysis, BNP Paribas remains “Overweight” on Sandisk (SNDK) with a price target of $650, which implies an upside potential of 23% from current levels.
Founded in 1988, Sandisk was, until recently, a niche name known only in the technology space for its memory prowess. However, as memory stocks went parabolic, Sandisk captured the imagination of a wide swath of the investing world. Established to commercialize flash memory storage technology, Sandisk is now a semiconductor storage company focused on NAND flash memory and solid-state storage solutions.
Valued at a market cap of $77.8 billion, SNDK stock is up a scarcely believable 921% over the past year.
Now, the bone of contention is whether Sandisk can keep this up or not. Truthfully, although BNP Paribas has made a case for investing in the stock, its opinion is based on short-term triggers. Has Sandisk got it in itself to be a bona fide wealth creator for years? Let’s find out.